The shoulder did not improve. Instead, Jack developed a fever again. Suppuration from the wound turned yellow and foul-smelling. He felt it sapping his strength but he continued to work alongside the others. They were concerned for him, uneasy at his dogged persistence, and finally almost angry when he refused to rest.
"But there is much to be done!" he insisted. Leaning on the shovel he was using to dig irrigation channels to newly leafed beans, he looked about. "Where is Charlie? He should be here to show me where to run these damned ditches!"
"I don't know, Mr. Jack," Eggleston said, mopping his bald head. "He went out early this morning with a sack on his back. Perhaps he is looking for edible plants of some sort."
Mrs. Glore trundled by a load of mesquite wood cut for the kitchen fire. "He don't like my cooking, that's a fact!" Laying down the load, she struggled for breath. "You know what Charlie favors? Yesterday I seen him with a snare, trapping them little mice that runs around the bushes. He throws 'em in the fire to singe 'em, and gobbles 'em down like they was patty foo graw!"
Phoebe shuddered; her face grew pale. "I'm glad I didn't see him! I'd have lost all my suppers for a week back!"
That night Drumm sat by candlelight and wrote a long letter to his brother Andrew:
It is so very strange—I was on the final leg of my Grand Tour, yet here I find myself suddenly the majordomo of a flourishing settlement along the banks of the Agua Fria River in this backwater of civilization! You spoke of the doggedness, the determination, which I think most of the Drumms possess. Well, perhaps mine has betrayed me into a foolish adventure! Yet there are compensations. The winter air is like wine; the sun shines beneficently, the birds sing in the saguaro and pitahaya—they are cactuses, you know—and a very pretty young lady, Miss Phoebe Larkin, has stopped here along with her companion until they find suitable transportation to Prescott. I think our Eggie is rather fond of Mrs. Glore. However, I do not find Miss Larkin to my taste. She is a very forward female, inclined to be rough and strident, though she did participate magnificently in the latest attack on us by the renegade Agustín and his bloodthirsty Apaches.
He concluded with a request for Andrew to cable him the sum of five hundred pounds, payable at the Merchant's and Drover's Bank of Phoenix, A.T. (that meant "Arizona Territory," he explained), and sealed the letter, meaning to send it by stage to Prescott and thus eastward on the cars. Hearing rustling outside the lean-to, muted voices, he started in alarm and reached for his pistol. "Who is it?" he called. "Eggie, is that you?"
The valet was supposed to be on watch atop the tower they had built from precious lumber.
"Phoebe?" he asked. "Mrs. Glore?"
The intruder was Charlie, the Papago. Grinning from ear to ear, he entered the lean-to. "Ostin," he said to Jack Drumm, holding up a hand in salute. Jack did not know what the word meant, but it seemed a term of respect, like "sir," perhaps, or "your honor." Phoebe Larkin was behind Charlie, carrying a bucket, and Eggleston brought up the rear of the procession.
"What is this?" Jack demanded. "What is this all about?"
Phoebe set down the bucket, filled with black mud from the river.
"Charlie and I," she explained, "are going to cure your shoulder. You've gone long enough with that festering wound. Now it's time for back-country remedies to take over."
Over his protests, Phoebe unbuttoned the ragged shirt. "You remember—you asked this morning where Charlie was? Well, I don't speak Papago but with signs I made him understand what I wanted. He went out and got certain plants and together we ground them up and mixed them into this mud. Now we are going to manufacture a poultice and put it on your shoulder."
He tried to resist but Eggleston and Charlie easily bore him to the pallet. Phoebe mixed the evil-smelling concoction with a stick.
"Mr. Jack!" Eggleston said severely. "This is for your own good, sir! I am only a valet, but I am getting very tired of your stubbornness!"
Jack Drumm stared unbelievingly. Eggleston appeared frightened by his own temerity but kept a firm hold on his master while Phoebe Larkin smeared the black stuff on the wound. She covered it with fragrant-smelling leaves, the whole bound in place by a strip from a ruined blanket.
"There!" she said. "Now you just lay back there and let those yarbs work! In Pocahontas County my Uncle Buell knew every yarb—herb—there was. Were? Anyway—"
The poultice did not smell as bad as he had feared. There was a resiny fragrance to it, and the coolness of the mud was balm to the inflamed shoulder. Eggleston and Mrs. Glore tiptoed out to let the two of them alone. Phoebe sat beside him, candle flickering on her hair and lighting responsive flames. When for a long time he did not speak, she asked, "Isn't that better?"
He nodded, bemused by the candlelight and her presence.
"We never really got a chance to talk," she said. "Maybe it's my fault. I know I come on pretty strong at times, like a mule with his ears laid back. But I like to hear you talk, you're so educated and all." She paused for a moment. "Tell me about England," she said softly. "What's it like? When I was a little girl I had a book about England—all about the old kings and such."
He told her about the Plantagenets; about the Wars of the Roses, Henry and his innumerable wives, Queen Elizabeth, the Stuarts, the Restoration, all about Pitt and Castlereagh, to whom he was distantly related; and about the Whigs, and Queen Victoria.
"Did you ever see her—Queen Victoria, I mean?"
"Once. My father took me to Buckingham Palace. I was very small—don't remember much about it."
"And—about you!"
He was getting drowsy. "What about me?"
"Tell me about you!"
He felt peaceful; his shoulder no longer hurt. Sleepily he murmured, "I'll make a bargain with you, Phoebe."
"What bargain?"
"If you tell me," he said, "the truth—the truth, mind you—about how you came to be here, and why you are staying here, I'll tell you all about John Peter Christian Drumm."
She looked at him, eyes somber, almost black, in the glow of the candle. "I told you! My father—"
He shook his head. "All that business about your father being a judge in New York City, a crowd of suitors begging for your hand, the judge packing you off to travel, your wealthy uncle in Prescott—"
"Don't you believe me?"
Perhaps, being drowsy, he was insensitive to her agitation.
"It is cut from the whole cloth," he told her. "You do not talk or act in the least like a refined young lady from a great metropolitan center. You know about 'yarbs' that certainly do not grow on Manhattan Island, and are very familiar with guns. Mrs. Glore speaks of being 'from far up the holler and weaned on a bullet.' You refuse to return to Phoenix, speaking of some dreadful experience there. Yet when you have a perfectly good chance to travel to Prescott, you beg off with some cock-and-bull story about Mrs. Glore's liver. I am not a complete idiot, you know, in spite of Lieutenant Dunaway's opinion." He shaded his eyes from the candle with a hand and looked at her. "Tell me—what is your secret, Miss Phoebe Larkin, or whatever your name is?"
He had meant it jokingly, in the best of good humor, but she grew distraught. "You—you—" She broke off, twisting the handkerchief in her fingers. "I have told you everything—at least, what I was lief to tell." She gave him a long and tragic look. Never had he seen her so lacking in composure. Gone was the clever and confident young woman; Phoebe Larkin suddenly became a fearful child, eyes misting with tears and pain.